Love is in the air: Dana Fall, Mina Harigae each recently got married at Superstition Mountain, where they’ll compete for 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship title

The two golfers had their weddings in the days leading up to the LPGA’s return to Arizona.

SUPERSTITION MOUNTAIN, Ariz. — Mina Harigae got married last Saturday, just five days before the start of the 2023 LPGA Drive On Championship.

She did so at the Superstition Mountain Golf & Country Club, host of the first full-field LPGA event of the season.

Dana Fall (nee Finkelstein) tied the knot on Feb. 25, 2023, also at Superstition Mountain. Well, technically, on top of Superstition Mountain, as she and new husband Henry made a predawn trek, along with his younger sister Belle Fall, who officiated the wedding and took some amazing photos at Lone Tree at Weaver’s Needle.

“There’s this one tree and we got married under that tree,” Fall said, adding that the two had hiked the trail before. “It was a cool spot and we were just going to go to the courthouse but we figured we should do something, I don’t know, something special, something we can remember.”

Who gets the credit, though, for actually coming up with it?

“It was Henry’s idea,” said Fall, who went to Corona del Sol High School in nearby Tempe, Arizona, before playing college golf at UNLV. “I just wanted to do something simple and small. I like going on hikes. It was fun. We started in the dark because we wanted to be up there at sunrise. I had never done a night hike.”

That meant headlamps. And golf clubs.

Dana Fall
Dana Fall and her husband Henry on top of Superstition Mountain for their wedding on Feb. 25, 2023. (Photo: Belle Fall)

“We took some golf clubs up with us to take pictures with, but also to have as weapons, just in case there was. … you never know,” she said smiling. “And then at the bottom, our parents were there. They wanted to be a part of it, so we re-did the ceremony down there for them.”

That 90-minute hike on Feb. 25, 2023, was captured in photos by Belle, an ordained minister who is also a photographer. The wedding took place three years to the day after the couple first met.

Coming back down the mountain, the golf clubs were a talking point for hikers heading up the other way.

“People were heckling us, like, ‘Why do you have golf clubs?’ Every single person coming down,” she joked.

Harigae’s wedding was more recent – Sat., March 18, 2023 – and a little less adventuresome but no less memorable.

Harigae, who grew up in Monterey Peninsula, moved to Arizona about 14 years ago. The 2021 U.S. Solheim Cup team member and runner-up in the 2022 U.S. Open, was the first LPGA honorary member at Superstition Mountain Golf Club and during one her first days practicing there “our general manager Mark Gurnow told Travis Kreiter to go introduce himself and at the time he was playing professionally,” Harigae said.

Mina Harigae
Mina Harigae and her husband Travis Kreiter at Superstition Mountain Golf & Country Club in Arizona, where they were married on March 18, 2023. (Photo: Mina Harigae)

It didn’t take long at all for the two former college golfers – Kreiter played at Bradley; Harigae had one season at Duke before turning pro – to hit it off.

“We played nine holes the first time we played, he took $20 off me,” she said. “That was the day before I had to leave for a seven-week stretch, but we talked every day.”

Kreiter was her caddie last summer when she finished solo second, which was good for a $1 million payday, at Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club in Southern Pines, North Carolina, at the U.S. Women’s Open.

The two sneakerheads wore matching red Air Jordans on their wedding day. Just don’t look for them on any hiking trails.

“I don’t like hiking,” she joked. “Travis and I are not hikers, so that is their [Dana’s and Henry’s] thing. That is not our thing.”

This week, Harigae and Fall will each seek to win for the first time on the LPGA. There could be no better backdrop than Superstition Mountain.

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LPGA returns to Arizona at Superstition Mountain, which is owned by a woman and will have a woman-owned business running concessions for Drive On event

The LPGA is back in Arizona. It’s also back at one of its most popular stops.

SUPERSTITION MOUNTAIN, Ariz. — The LPGA is back in Arizona. It’s also back at one of its most popular stops.

Perhaps it’s fitting that the golf club hosting the event is owned by a woman, and the company hired to run concessions during the tournament is also woman-owned.

All that wasn’t done by design but it does speak to a convergence of events that puts women at the forefront of the LPGA’s first full-field event on the 2023 schedule.

The Drive On Championship will be held at Superstition Mountain Golf Club, March 23-26. It’s the fourth event of the season but the first three were limited field tournaments.

Top-ranked Lydia Ko and Minjee Lee aren’t in the field but the best of the rest are going to play, as Nos. 2, 3 and 4 – Nelly Korda, Jin Young Ko and Atthaya Thitikul – are set to tee it up, as are Lexi Thompson, Brooke Henderson, Lilia Vu, Danielle Kang and Jennifer Kupcho.

“It’s going to be a star-studded field,” said Scott Wood, the 2023 tournament director. Six of the top 10 and 14 of the top 20-ranked golfers in the world are in the field of 144.

Old stomping grounds

Arizona golf fans will remember Superstition Mountain.

It hosted the Safeway International for five years, from 2004 to 2008. Those events are remembered for the three World Golf Hall of Famers who won there: Annika Sorenstam in 2004 and 2005; Juli Inkster in 2006; Lorena Ochoa in 2007 and 2008.

The location was a hit for fans, as well, with more than 150,000 spectators roaming the galleries those weeks.

2008 Safeway International
Lorena Ochoa pitches to the 18th green as fans look on during the third round of the 2008 Safeway International at Superstition Mountain Golf & Country Club in Superstition Mountain, Arizona. (Photo: Scott Halleran/Getty Images)

The LPGA returned to the Grand Canyon State with the Founders Cup in 2011. That event was last staged in Arizona in 2019 when Jin Young Ko won her first tournament in the U.S. at the Bank of Hope Founders Cup at Wildfire Golf Club. The 2020 event was canceled by the COVID pandemic and then the tournament was moved out of the state.

In the ensuing years, Susan Hladky, owner of Superstition Mountain, and her general manager Mark Gurnow started working behind the scenes to bring professional golf back to their corner of the world.

One of their first efforts was to try to attract the KPMG Women’s PGA. They aimed high right off the bat, swinging for the fences to land a major. While that didn’t pan out, it did help get them in front of some of the movers and shakers in the tournament world.

“That never quite came to fruition but it got our juices flowing, and we were saying ‘How are we going to do this?'” said Gurnow, who had several talks with the LPGA.

Then, suddenly, his phone rang.

“I guess it was last fall, they said ‘Might you be interested?'” he said. Indeed they were, even though they had to be ready a mere six months later.

Not even golfers

Neither Hladky nor her husband played golf but the opportunity to purchase Superstition Mountain was too good to pass up in late 2009. Lyle Anderson had developed the site with Jack Nicklaus but fell on hard times and had to let the club with two 18-hole layouts go as the economy hit the skids.

Less than two years later, James, a Wyoming oilman, died when his helicopter crashed. Susan was suddenly the sole owner and operator of the golf club.

Susan HladkySusan Hladky at Superstition Mountain Golf and Country Club. (Photo: Joel Angel Juarez/The Arizona Republic-USA TODAY NETWORK)

She has a strong team behind her, starting with Gurnow, who’s been at the club for almost 10 years and was with Troon for seven years before that. Superstition Mountain’s director of agronomy, Scott Krout, has been with the club since it opened in 1999. He still has tournament notes from those Safeway events 15 years ago.

It’s believe Hladky is the only woman to own a course on the LPGA schedule, but she’s quick to not make a big deal about that.

“Maybe not a pioneer,” she said of her status. “But it’s exciting to think that maybe it’s influential to women’s golf.”

Her commitment to women’s game goes beyond hosting an LPGA event. Hladky has also opened her course to eight players who have membership:

  • Carlota Ciganda
  • Mina Harigae
  • Dana Finkelstein
  • Jaclyn Lee
  • Charlotte Thomas
  • Caroline Inglis
  • Jennifer Kupcho
  • Brianna Do

Superstition Mountain has also hosted amateur and college events, including an upcoming NCAA regional:

  • Arizona Women’s Divisional Stroke Play
  • U.S. Women’s Open qualifying (twice)
  • University of Kansas college event
  • University of Denver college event
  • Southwest Section Pro-Lady Championship (twice)
  • NCAA Women’s regional (2025)

“When I grew up, it was more of a man’s sport, women got a day a week or whatever,” Hladky said. Her efforts now are opening doors for so many.

“We’re definitely making a concerted effort across the tour to work with more women-owned or diversity-owned companies,” Wood said. “When we bring a tour somewhere there’s a significant economic boost to that town so if we can help support business owners that look like our players, and are as successful as our players, that’s a win for all of us.”

Superstition Mountain’s membership is well north of 400. Last November, the members raised $80,000 for Sunshine Acres, a local charity that provides for homeless children. The membership is taking to the LPGA event, too, with many of them making up the volunteer crew of about 400 people.

One-year deal for now

The Drive On Championship is owned and operated by the LPGA and has been held in other states previously. The tournament for now is only slated for 2023 but if all goes well, who knows?

“We hope this goes well and the event returns in 2024,” said Hladky.

“Success for us is to bring the tour back to the fans of Phoenix. Have great crowds, great weather, competitive rounds,” said Wood. “We’ll crown a champion next Sunday and take a look at things and see how we can improve next time and see where the ’24 schedule develops.”

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LPGA’s return to Arizona features a stellar field, DJs on the driving range, flat-screens for March Madness, selfie stations

The LPGA is finally returning to one of golf’s hotbeds.

SUPERSTITION MOUNTAIN, Ariz. — The LPGA is finally returning to one of golf’s hotbeds.

The Drive On Championship, the first full-field event in 2023, will be held at Superstition Mountain Golf Club, March 23-26. If the name of the course sounds familiar, the LPGA’s Safeway International was played at Superstition Mountain for five years, last visiting there in 2008 before moving to Portland.

The LPGA staged other events around the greater Phoenix area for the next 12 years, only missing 2010. The Founders Cup got its start in Arizona, and golf ball maker Volvik was named the title sponsor for the 2020 event, but that never came off as the COVID pandemic knocked it and several other pro golf events off the calendar that year.

So it’s been since 2019 that the LPGA last competed in Arizona. Jin Young Ko made the Bank of Hope Founders Cup her third LPGA win and first in the U.S. at Wildfire Golf Club that year.

Now the LPGA is back at a popular location near the Superstition Mountains, which provide a stunning backdrop from all vantage points around the property.

2008 Safeway International
The 18th green during the final round of the 2008 Safeway International at Superstition Mountain Golf and Country Club in Superstition Mountain, Arizona. (Photo: Scott Halleran/Getty Images)

“I think it’s amazing. Really important. This is a warm-weather hub,” said owner by Susan Hladky.

She and Superstition Mountain general manager Mark Gurnow had been working for several years to bring a tournament to the venue. They first tried landing the KMPG Women’s PGA. There were also talks with the PGA Tour Champions.

“I figured either the ladies or the senior players are the ones this golf course is going to fit,” said Gurnow.

In the end, the best fit was the LPGA, although the announcement didn’t come till November 2022. It’s a been a mad dash to get the course ready ever since.

An ace in the hole for Superstition Mountain: director of agronomy Scott Krout has been there since the place opened in 1999.

“He was here when the first shovel went into the ground and was here when we [LPGA] played here last, so he’s got it dialed in,” said 2023 tournament director Scott Wood.

Fans coming out to watch the golf and enjoy the sunshine will also experience what tournament officials are calling a sports-bar atmosphere with the 19th Hole Beer Garden near the driving range, where Arizona-based DJ’s DJ Javin (Wednesday to Friday) and DJ Aja Cruz (Saturday and Sunday) will crank up the tunes.

In addition, there will be large flatscreens with Golf Channel’s coverage of the golf but also the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournament games.

There will be another hangout spot at the 17th hole featuring the theme “You Glow Girl” where specialty drinks served in souvenir cups. Concessions will be available there.

Fans can get up close and personal with the LPGA golfers, who plan to visit “Selfie Stations” around the course.

The bottom line: fun for fans.

“They can watch some golf, eat some good food, catch up on their brackets. We’re going to have a family fun zone for kids,” Wood said. “Just trying to bring some different energies to the golf course in certain places.

“We feel it’s important to do some different things, to try some different things, since we basically are our own title sponsor for this week. Why not try it, right? We can only yell at ourselves,” he continued. “Overall, we just want people to have a good time. We know the golf is going to be great.”

The Drive On is owned and operated by the LPGA. The event is scheduled at Superstition Mountain for just this season, but all parties involved are hoping to secure a long-term partnership.

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